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Trappers Turn Unveils Reimagined Canyon 7 in Wisconsin Dells

Trappers Turn Unveils Reimagined Canyon 7 in Wisconsin Dells

By Brian Weis


I have played Trappers Turn in Wisconsin Dells more times than I can count, and for years the seventh on the Canyon nine was the hole everybody photographed and nobody quite figured out. A short iron dropped into a deep, rock-walled canyon, the kind of one-shotter that makes your buddies go quiet on the tee and then immediately start chirping when somebody dumps it. It was always the signature. It was also stuck at the bottom of a hole that could not breathe, which meant the green never quite kept up with the scenery.


That problem is now solved, and then some.


Trappers Turn pulled the wraps off a fully reimagined Canyon 7 on May 19, 2026, finishing a year-long renovation that did not so much tweak the hole as set it free. The crew cleared out decades of overgrowth, unearthed the natural sandstone formations that make the Dells the Dells, and built in waterfalls that flow behind a green that now runs close to 6,000 square feet. That is nearly double what it used to be. More green means more pin positions, which means more ways for this hole to embarrass you on any given Tuesday.


Who Built It


This was not a one-name job. The redesign brought together a serious group: Wisconsin golf legend and two-time U.S. Open champion Andy North, architect Craig Haltom of Haltom Design, owner Todd Nelson, and Patrick Steffes. North is the guy who shaped the original Trappers Turn vision and built the 12 North par-3 course on property, so having him back for this one tells you how much it mattered. Haltom handled the heavy lifting on the redesign, and the result is a hole he describes as playing into a box canyon, complete with new bunkering, a fresh angle of approach that walks you past the rock walls, and that waterfall work behind the putting surface.


North called it a unique place to put a green, and said nobody expected the rock work to turn out as beautiful as it did. Nelson, never one to undersell, put it more simply. He said it is so beautiful it is beyond belief. Owners say things like that. The difference here is that the photos back him up.


Why You Should Care


Here is the honest take. Wisconsin has real par-3s. Erin Hills, Lawsonia, SentryWorld with its flower hole, plenty of others worth the gas money. Canyon 7 belongs in that conversation now, and it might win it on pure drama. You stand on an elevated tee, you look down into a box canyon lifted straight out of an old Western, and you try to land a golf ball between waterfalls and craggy sandstone without your heart rate giving you away. That is not a hole you forget. That is a hole you talk about over bourbon afterward.


And that is the other thing about Trappers Turn. It is 27 holes of championship golf one mile from downtown Wisconsin Dells, owned by Todd Nelson, the same guy who founded Kalahari Resorts. So when you make the trip you get the golf, the waterparks for whoever you dragged along, and roughly nine hundred dinner options within a short drive. The course has also added a 12-hole putting course and a new short-game practice area, which means you can warm up, play the Canyon nine, and lose a small fortune in a putting match before dinner.


So book the round, and when you build the loop, make sure your itinerary runs through the Canyon nine. Step onto the seventh tee, take the picture everybody takes, and then try to actually hit the green. Trust me, the photo is the easy part.



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Revised: 06/03/2026 - Article Viewed 660 Times - View Course Profile


About: Brian Weis


Brian Weis While Brian Weis has made a name for himself in the golf world, he also appreciates the finer things in life - like a world-class spa treatment after a grueling 18 holes (or even after a casual round where the only thing working hard was his golf cart). A self-proclaimed "golfer who enjoys relaxation more than practice," Brian has developed a deep appreciation for massages that unknot his questionable swing mechanics, saunas that sweat out a few too many post-round drinks, and infinity pools with views as stunning as a well-manicured par 3.

Brian’s spa journey began as a reluctant tag-along to couples' massages and resort spa packages but quickly evolved into a full-fledged appreciation for hot stone therapy, deep-tissue recovery, and the occasional seaweed wrap (don’t knock it till you try it). Now, he seeks out the best spa retreats, thermal baths, and relaxation havens wherever his travels take him, whether it's a luxury golf resort with a five-star spa or a hidden wellness gem perfect for unwinding in style.

On SpaTrips.com, Brian shares his experiences, reviews, and insider tips on the best places to soothe sore muscles, indulge in rejuvenating treatments, and find true relaxation, whether you're a hardcore golfer in need of recovery or just someone looking for the ultimate escape. After all, what’s the point of a bucket list golf trip if you can’t top it off with an expert massage, a hot soak, and maybe even a ridiculously plush robe"



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